Ratings Breakdown (1-10)

PERFORMANCE The FinePix JZ500 provides some impressive usability, but not much personal input into the photographic process, which may be a serious concern for some shooters. Overall, Fuji ‘s new compact ultrazoom does a pretty good job, but competition is fierce in this point-and-shoot class. As one of the leaders of the parade, the JZ500 is helping to set the standard for this new marketing niche. I predict that by this time next year small cameras with big zoom lenses will be leading the pack in sales and that all the OEM powerhouses will have jumped on the bandwagon.Shooting Performance The JZ500 is quick enough to handle most general action photography. It was able to capture this colorful skateboarder in mid-air.

The JZ500’s TTL Contrast Detection AF system provides both center and multi-AF point Auto Focus. AF is fairly quick and dependably accurate; in face detection mode, the JZ500’s AF system can track up to 10 faces. The AF system works nicely in decent outdoor light, but it often has difficulty locking focus in dimmer indoor light. Focusing is also noticeably slower in poor outdoor light.

Shutter Lag (press-to-capture, pre-focused)

Camera

Time (seconds)

Fujifilm FinePix JZ500

0.01

Canon PowerShot A3100 IS

0.01

Sony Cyber-shot S2100

0.02

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS7

0.02

AF Acquisition (press-to-capture, no pre-focus)

Camera

Time (seconds)

Fujifilm FinePix JZ500

0.38

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS7

0.39

Canon PowerShot A3100 IS

0.41

Sony Cyber-shot S2100

0.68

Continuous Shooting

Camera

Frames

Framerate*

Panasonic Lumix DMC-ZS7

3

1.8 fps

Fujifilm FinePix JZ500

3

1.4 fps

Sony Cyber-shot S2100

∞

1.0 fps

Canon PowerShot A3100 IS

∞

0.9 fps

*Note: Continuous shooting framerates are based on the camera’s fastest full-resolution JPEG continuous shooting mode, using the fastest media type available (300x CF, SDHC, etc.). “Frames” denote the number of captures recorded per burst before the camera stops/slows to clear the buffer.

The compact ultrazoom class has ballooned from just a few models a couple of years ago to the much longer list of entries currently available, which means each new camera needs to include a feature to make it stand out from the rest of the pack.

To that end, Fuji has expanded its face recognition capabilities since most of the photos shot globally are informal portraits and pet pictures. With the JZ500 and its siblings, take a picture of someone, then tell the camera who that person is (Dad, Mom, GF, BF, Wife, etc.), select a category (friends or family) and add the individual’s birthday. The next time you take a picture of that person, the camera will recognize this face through the JZ500’s new Picture Search Tool and your Face Recognition data (name, birthday and category) to help you find and play back your favorite photos quickly and easily. If all that isn’t “over the top” enough for you, the JZ500 also provides a similarly featured pet recognition option.

A current product development struggle for manufacturers is to create a digicam capable of capturing sharply focused, high-resolution, noise-free images under a broad variety of shooting scenarios. Image stabilization (IS) has become essentially ubiquitous these days; a digicam rarely doesn’t feature an Image Stabilization System. Most digicams from top-tier manufacturers provide either optical IS or sensor shift IS.

The JZ500 features Dual Image Stabilization, a combination of sensor shift image stabilization, which allows users to shoot at shutter speeds up to 3 EV slower than would have been possible without IS, and Picture Stabilization, which is Fuji’s version of digital IS. Digital IS boosts shutter speed and increases sensitivity to reduce blur. Shooting at higher sensitivities (combined with faster shutter speeds) allows users to avoid blurry images that result from camera shake or subject movement, but as sensitivity (ISO) increases, noise levels also rise.

The JZ500 draws its juice from a proprietary Fuji NP-45A Li-ion rechargeable battery. According to Fuji, the JZ500 records up to 230 images with a fully charged battery, but that seems a bit optimistic to me based on my experiences with the camera. It’s difficult for me to keep track of exposures because I shoot, review, delete and re-shoot often.

Here’s an important note for purchasers of the JZ500: when Fuji says “low battery,” they aren’t kidding. When the JZ500’s low battery icon appears, the camera almost immediately goes belly-up powerwise; you might get to capture one or two additional still images, but no video clips. I ran into this sudden power crash situation twice during my tests of the JZ500.

The JZ500 records images to 40 MB of onboard storage or to industry standard SD memory media, which leaves Sony as the only proprietary memory media holdout.

Lens PerformanceWhen I first read the description of the JZ500’s features I thought that the JZ500’s 10x Fujinon 5-50mm (28-280mm equivalent) f/3.3-5.6 optical zoom might be the same excellent 10x optic that graced last year’s impressive Fuji F70EXR, and that appears to be the case – at least all the specifications are the same. The JZ500’s zoom features Fuji’s super EBC coating to reduce ghosting and flare.

When the JZ500 is powered up, the zoom extends automatically and when the camera is powered down, the zoom is fully retracted into the camera body and a built-in iris style lens cover closes to protect the front element. Zooming is smooth and fairly quiet. The JZ500’s optical performance is pretty good, but images display noticeable corner softness and some very minor vignetting (dark corners).

Barrel distortion (at the wide-angle end of the zoom range) is noticeably higher than average, but pincushion distortion is negligible at the telephoto end of the zoom. Chromatic aberration is slightly above average; purple fringing is visible in high contrast areas and color transition areas. The JZ500’s zoom covers the 35mm equivalent of 28mm to 280mm, which is a very useful moderate wide-angle to medium telephoto focal length range that should provide essentially everything this camera’s target audience is likely to need. Minimum focusing distance (in macro mode) is 2 inches.

Video QualityThe JZ500 captures HD video at 1280×720 pixels and lower resolutions (24fps/30fps) with monaural audio – the 10x zoom can be used during video capture. Videos tend to be properly exposed and run smoothly. Video quality is about average.

Image QualitySome of Fujifilm’s cameras really shine in the image quality department, though the JZ500 doesn’t quite rise to the level of Fuji’s better digicams like the F70EXR. Most P&S digicams boost color saturation because amateurs and casual shooters like bold bright hues and harder contrast, but the JZ500 (even with the Chrome color option enabled) is actually pretty close to neutral, but with slightly softer contrast than most of its competition.

I would have liked to see the JZ500 offer the color saturation choices (based on well known Fuji 35mm films Velvia, Provia, and Astia) that made the F70 EXR so tweakable, in terms of color saturation/intensity. Outdoors, in good light, the JZ500’s image quality is consistently very good to excellent. Exposures are dependably accurate although there is a noticeable tendency toward overexposure in pictures with a lot of sky, and highlights are sometimes burned out in brightly lit outdoor scenes.

The JZ500 provides a decent range of sensitivity options, including Auto and user-set options for ISO 100 to 3200. ISO 100 images show bright colors, slightly softer than average native contrast, and very low noise levels. ISO 200 images were also very good, but with a little less snap. At the ISO 400 setting, noise levels are noticeably higher and there’s a barely perceptible loss of minor detail.

ISO 100

ISO 100, 100% crop

ISO 200

ISO 200, 100% crop

ISO 400

ISO 400, 100% crop

ISO 800

ISO 800, 100% crop

ISO 1600

ISO 1600, 100% crop

ISO 800 images are very noisy, but they should be OK for email images and 3 x 5 or 4 x 6 inch prints. Above ISO 800, images are way too noisy to be useful for anything aside from tabloid-style shots of the Loch Ness Monster or Bigfoot.